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Where are the beachmasters? Unexpectedly weak polygyny among southern elephant seals on a South Shetland Island

Hazel Nichols Orcid Logo, B. Fuchs, A. J. Paijmans Orcid Logo, G. Lewis, C. A. Bonin Orcid Logo, M. E. Goebel Orcid Logo, J. I. Hoffman Orcid Logo

Journal of Zoology, Volume: 316, Issue: 2, Pages: 104 - 117

Swansea University Author: Hazel Nichols Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1111/jzo.12936

Abstract

Intraspecific variation in animal mating systems can have important implications for ecological, evolutionary and demographic processes in wild populations. For example, patterns of mating can impact social structure, dispersal, effective population size and inbreeding. However, few species have bee...

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Published in: Journal of Zoology
ISSN: 0952-8369 1469-7998
Published: Wiley 2022
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa58796
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Abstract: Intraspecific variation in animal mating systems can have important implications for ecological, evolutionary and demographic processes in wild populations. For example, patterns of mating can impact social structure, dispersal, effective population size and inbreeding. However, few species have been studied in sufficient detail to elucidate mating system plasticity and its dependence on ecological and demographic factors. Southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) have long been regarded as a textbook example of a polygynous mating system, with dominant ‘beachmaster’ males controlling harems of up to several hundred females. However, behavioural and genetic studies have uncovered appreciable geographic variation in the strength of polygyny among elephant seal populations. We, therefore, used molecular parentage analysis to investigate patterns of parentage in a small satellite colony of elephant seals at the South Shetland Islands. We hypothesised that dominant males would be able to successfully monopolise the relatively small numbers of females present in the colony, leading to relatively high levels of polygyny. A total of 424 individuals (comprising 33 adult males, 101 adult females and 290 pups) sampled over 8 years were genotyped at 20 microsatellites and reproductive success was analysed by genetically assigning parents. Paternity could only be assigned to 31 pups (10.7%), despite our panel of genetic markers being highly informative and the genotyping error rate being very low. The strength of inferred polygyny was weak in comparison to previous genetic studies of the same species, with the most successful male fathering only seven pups over the entire course of our study. Our results show that, even in a species long regarded as a model for extreme polygyny, male reproductive skew can vary substantially among populations.
Keywords: beachmaster, mating system plasticity, Mirounga leonina, polygyny, reproductive skew, Southern elephant seal
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: US Antarctic Marine Living Resources Program; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Grant Number: NA16SEC4810007; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. Grant Numbers: 424119118, 316099922, 396774617–TRR 212; Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung; National Science Foundation. Grant Number: 2000211; ProjektDEAL
Issue: 2
Start Page: 104
End Page: 117